Then prime minister Bob Hawke receives the Barunga statement from Galarrwuy Yunupingu in Arnhem Land in 1988.Credit:Fairfax Media
On June 12,1988 when the then-Prime Minister Bob Hawke was handed the Barunga Statement by one of its main proponents,the then-chairman of the Northern Land Council,Galarrwuy Yunupingu,he promised that he would enter into a treaty with Indigenous Australia during that term of government,before 1990. Unfortunately,after returning to Canberra with the Burunga Statement,the Prime Minister abandoned his commitment to a treaty. So disappointed was Galarrwuy Yunupingu that the promised treaty did not eventuate that he asked for the Barunga Statement to be returned to his people. In doing so he made the following comment:
“Sovereignty turned into a treaty,the treaty turned into reconciliation and reconciliation turned into nothing.”
He asked,therefore,for the Statement to be returned to Barunga,where he said:“. . . we will hold a sorry funeral ceremony. We will dig a hole and bury it. It will be a protest . . . The time has come to send a strong message to Canberra and the world about the disgraceful state of Indigenous Australia,where governments have failed . . .”
The rejection by the current Prime Minister,Malcolm Turnbull,of the central features of the Uluru Statement from the Heart was far more categorical than that of Bob Hawke 30 years earlier. It is of course not only the federal government that has failed to meet the expectations or needs of Aboriginal people. ACT-specific data on Indigenous disadvantage in Canberra,whether it be incarceration rates,child protection,housing,educational outcomes,rough sleeping,homelessness,drug abuse,mental health or poverty,is as bad,and in many cases worse,than in other jurisdictions in Australia.